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4x5 super wide angle on the big island?


foraker

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Just curious to know if anyone found a 55mm lens useful when in Hawaii? I have an 80mm and have seen decent deal on a used 55mm.

Trying to decide whether to spend even MORE money I guess (he says, fighting the old grad student mentality of never spending any). In a month, I go there for two weeks.

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Matthew,

 

I just got back from two weeks on the Big Island! Awesome. I don't know why people waste their time on those more built-up islands. (Well, I do -- Haleakala and Kalalau Valley are also awesome.)

I just took my 6x9 rangefinder with a 65mm. It was wide enough for lava fields and Kamehameha Avenue in Hilo and rainforests. I wouldn't buy a 55 (for 4x5) just for that. I never wished I had my 47, though I did wish I had my Arca once or twice.

 

Sandy

PS feel free to ask questions about where to go if you haven't been....

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Thanks Sandy. I'm going for two weeks with my wife. We have a 4WD and are basically camping so we can go where we want. I'm not looking for tripod holes, but certainly suggestions, cautions, etc are welcome. :-)
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Just got back from Kauai for 9 days. I used an Ebony 23s 6x9 and a Fuji 645zi

rangefinder. With the Ebony I frequently used the 65 (similar to a 90 on a 4x5) and

found it to be quite satisfactory. Really it depends on your style of shooting and your

subject matter. Do you usually go for really wide angles with landscapes? If you find

that your 80 is satisfactory for most of your wide shooting then I would think that it

would work well in Hawaii as well. Just my .02¢....

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Matthew, enjoy yourself. The 4WD will come in handy. I went to the Big Island a couple of years ago and was very pleased the people I was visiting suggested I rent a 4WD rather than a 2WD. There are lots of places inaccessible with a 2WD vehicle.

<P>

I found "Hawaii: The Big Island Revealed" by Wizard Publishing the best book for information, and not just about photography. You should be able to find it in your local bookstore -- if not, then on Amazon. Though I shot only 35mm, I would suspect an 80mm in LF is wide enough for anything you'd want to shoot.

<P>

Here are a couple of threads from photo.net that discuss locations:

<BR><A HREF="http://www.photo.net/bboard/q-and-a-fetch-msg?msg_id=0031MW">http://www.photo.net/bboard/q-and-a-fetch-msg?msg_id=0031MW</A><BR>

<A HREF="http://www.photo.net/bboard/q-and-a-fetch-msg?msg_id=001Hnn">http://www.photo.net/bboard/q-and-a-fetch-msg?msg_id=001Hnn</A>

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Brian is quite right about the blue guidebook, fantastic. We didn't buy it till halfway around the island in Hilo, and we were kicking ourselves that we didn't have it on the Kona side too. The Rough Guide of the Big Island is also excellent - and very small. Anyway, do save your lens money for food -- restaurants and grocery stores are very expensive. We did not camp, we splurged on B&Bs and small hotels. If you're tired of getting rained on on the Hilo side, stay at Dolphin Bay and get a kitchen. (about $85) Do not avoid the rainy side -- the light is transcendent!!! And the foliage bodacious. Just use a lens hood to keep the mist off the lens. We did not have 4WD so you will get up Mauna Kea which we did not do. Here are our highlights:

 

Snorkeling: buy equipment at Snorkel Bob's in Kona, go in off Two-Step down at Cities of Refuge. Also Kapoho Tidepools in Puna area. Also left side of Hapuna Beach (BEST swimming beach).

 

Drive: along Puna coast to lava flow, stop at black sand beach.

Hike: in Volcanoes Nat'l Park, do Kilauea Iki and Byron Ledge to center of Caldera (trail name beginning with H) and over to Crater Rim trail - 8 mile loop. Incredible landscape changes.

Lava: Go before dusk to lava flow, ask rangers where. Flashlight essential.

 

In Volcano - the Thai restaurant is great and Kilauea Lodge even better.

 

Hilo: splurge on this restaurant, or at least have a drink: Kakaido, it's new. Used to be a bank, they keep wine in the vault.

See Pacific Tsunami Museum.

Visit Hawaii Botanical Gardens - beyond gorgeous.

Wed & Sat -- Hilo Farmer's Market, great stuff

 

Hike: Waipi'o Valley -- 4WD can drive down but we were studdly and walked - steepest paved road on earth. Cross the stream, hike up other side for best view.

 

I will try to attach 2 pictures in a few minutes.

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I do not think you should involve yourself and your money in a

55mm lens. Sure if you had it you would probably use it some,

but you would have to carry it. I live in the island of Maui and have

been to the Big Island. It is BIG and beautiful. I wish I had a large

format camera when I went there. I guess I can jump the stream

and be there again soon.

When I was doing 4x5", I only owned one lens, a 110mm

supersymmar XL. I found that I could do a lot of work with that

lens alone. At times I wish I had a wider one, but I think 55mm is

too wide for scenics.

Don't forget longer ones. The slopes of the volcanos are very

photogenic and would require long lenses, 210mm and beyond.

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Matthew, FWIW, I found my old 127mm quite usable. IMHO a 90mm would have been nice, but certainly not neccesary. If I could have had another lens besides either of these I'd have to agree with Christian and go with a long one---maybe my 240 G-Claron will stowaway next time 'round. Have a great trip!---------Cheers!
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Tribby, I love the Fuji but I am blowing through a lot of film. That's OK, I am definitely getting some good shots I would not have gotten with the Arca. I only handhold the Fuji so I've decided to use 400 NC film from now on to get an extra stop over the 160 NC. My best pictures from Hawai'i are closeups of small rocks on black sand beaches -- talk about your Zone III --- I would not have subjected the Arca & tripod to the salt water and sand, and I would not have been able to stop motion on the waves with the 160 speed film.

 

Cheers,

Sandy

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Been reading that Big Island Revealed guide. Wow, am I psyched! Any info on where one can find the best gas prices (relatively speaking of course since gas is expensive in HI by mainland standards).
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As I recall they were a little lower in Hilo, which makes sense because there's more competition there. That's the only big town. It was about 2.20 a gallon and up, last month. But you won't be driving that much. There are only, like, two roads. Get out and hike!

 

I hope you will report on your trip when you get back. Maybe I'll have something written for my website by then.

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